Bucs Fifth Circuit Denial 5/24/19
Bucs Fifth Circuit Denial 5/24/19
Bucs Fifth Circuit Denial 5/24/19
FILED
May 24, 2019
No. 18-30375
Lyle W. Cayce
Clerk
v.
CLAIMANT ID 100246928,
* Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH
CIR. R. 47.5.4.
1See Public Statistics for the Deepwater Horizon Economic and Property Damages
Settlement at http://www.deepwaterhorizoneconomicsettlement.com/docs/statistics.pdf.
No. 18-30375
Mexico during part of the cleanup. And anyone would recognize that the
decline in beach tourism likely hurt hotels and restaurants near the coast.
But various types of businesses with more attenuated connections to
conditions in the Gulf have also received compensation. Two examples are
nonprofits and law firms. See, e.g., BP Expl. & Prod., Inc. v. Claimant ID
100237661, 2019 WL 1511007 (5th Cir. April 5, 2019); BP Expl. & Prod., Inc.
v. Claimant ID 100204031, 2019 WL 1281203 (5th Cir. Mar. 18, 2019). Even
professional sports teams from Gulf Coast cities have sought money from BP.
See Claimant ID 100248748 v. BP Expl. & Prod., Inc., 2019 WL 1451309 (5th
Cir. Mar. 20, 2019). This appeal involves one of those claims filed by the NFL’s
Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The team seeks $19.5 million.
The spill’s impact on the Buccaneers may not be readily apparent.
Disastrous though the April 2010 explosion was for significant areas of the
Gulf and surrounding coast, it did not hurt the Buccaneers’ performance that
fall. The team went 10-6 after going just 3-13 the year before. The Bucs have
not had a 10-win season since. 2
But obtaining money from the Deepwater Horizon settlement program
does not require showing a direct connection between the spill and the
claimant’s business. Instead of having to litigate causation in countless trials,
BP agreed to determine eligibility largely based on whether a claimant’s
financial condition worsened after the spill. In re Deepwater Horizon, 744 F.3d
370, 376–77 (5th Cir. 2014). The settlement agreement essentially treats a
post-spill decline in a business’s profitability as circumstantial evidence of
causation.
The agreement established four geographic “economic loss zones”—
Zones A, B, C, and D. Claimants are treated more favorably the closer they
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No. 18-30375
also apply. See Ergon-West Virginia, Inc. v. Dynegy Mktg. & Trade, 706 F.3d
419, 424 (5th Cir. 2013).
We do not see a basis for disturbing the district court’s determination
that the team erred in allocating some of its NFL Ventures revenue in 2011 to
May and June. The Claims Administrator’s Policy 495 defines “error” as
“includ[ing], but not . . . limited to”:
duplicate accounting entries; debit entries recorded as credits or
vice versa; mistakes in applying applicable accounting principles
based on the claimant’s method of accounting; oversights or
misinterpretation of the facts; input or calculation errors; and/or
postings to the incorrect revenue and/or expense categories.
The district court interpreted that definition as encompassing an
unjustified departure from an established accounting practice. 3 We agree.
Much of the definition relates to mistakes that sound akin to typos or similar
oversights. But the definition also includes “mistakes in applying applicable
accounting principles based on the claimant’s method of accounting.” What
better indication of the claimant’s method of accounting than how it
historically recorded that revenue—that is, its established accounting
practice? An unjustified departure from an established accounting practice is
necessarily a mistake in applying that practice, and thus is an “error”
warranting reallocation.
The questions then become whether the district court clearly erred in
finding that (1) the Buccaneers’ established accounting practice was to record
NFL Ventures revenue only during the football season, and (2) the threat of a
lockout did not justify departing from that practice in 2011.
3 The team argues that, because the program accountants did not explicitly identify
an error, they cannot have moved the revenue to fix an error. But we are reviewing the
district court’s findings, not the settlement program’s. The district court did identify an error.
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No. 18-30375
On the team’s pre-2011 accounting practice, the record is not robust. The
settlement agreement did not require the Buccaneers to submit profit and loss
statements from before 2009, so there are only two years to consider prior to
the 2011 allocations at issue. 4 But in both those years, the team recorded its
NFL Ventures revenue from August to January (roughly comprising the
football season). The one exception is March 2009, but as the settlement
program’s accountants explained, that was an accounting entry to true up a
miscalculation of January 2009 revenue. 5
Despite the small sample size, the district court reasonably found that
the team had an established practice of recording NFL Ventures revenue
during the season and not outside it. Looking just at the months relevant to
the V-Shaped test (May–July), in neither 2009 nor 2010 did the team book NFL
Ventures revenue during these months. And given that the the March 2009
entry was just a true up of a previous miscalculation, none of the twelve off-
season months during 2009 and 2010 included NFL Ventures revenue. Indeed,
by arguing that the threat of a lockout justified recording NFL Ventures
revenue in May and June of 2011, the team essentially concedes that it
ordinarily would not have recorded NFL Ventures revenue in those months.
So the dispute comes down to the legitimacy of the lockout justification.
The Buccaneers fail to support it as a valid reason to deviate from its prior
practice. The team relies solely on the affidavit of its controller and repeatedly
misrepresents it as recounting a directive from the NFL that teams should
book NFL Ventures revenue during the offseason. See, e.g., Oral Arg. at 1:31–
44 (claiming that NFL Ventures “directed” the team to accrue revenue as it
4 For the reasons explained in the order denying the Buccaneers’ request to seal the
courtroom for oral argument, we will not seal this opinion but will omit revenue numbers.
See BP Expl. & Prod., Inc. v. Claimant ID 100246928, 920 F.3d 209 (5th Cir. 2019).
5 The team made a similar entry in March 2011, which it explained to the accountants
6 The team frames the reallocation of its 2011 NFL Ventures revenue as violating
Policy 495’s prohibition on finding errors based on hindsight. Had the district court offered
the same explanation as the program accountants—that is, that it turned out the lockout did
not extend into the season—there might be something to this argument (though perhaps not,
given the team’s offering no evidence that it made its allocation decisions before the lockout
ended). But the district court found that the deviation was unjustified by the threat of a
lockout, not that it became unjustified once the lockout ended.
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